Google's OKR Playbook (original) (raw)

No one has more collective experience in implementing OKRs than Google.

As the company has scaled (and scaled), it has periodically issued OKR guidelines. The following excerpts are drawn mostly from internal sources and reprinted with Google’s permission. (Note: This is Google’s approach to OKRs. Your approach may — and should — differ.)

At Google, we like to think big. We use a process called Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) to help us communicate, measure, and achieve those lofty goals.

Our actions determine Google’s future. As we’ve seen repeatedly — in Search, in Chrome, in Android — a team composed of a few percent of the company’s workforce, acting in concert toward an ambitious common goal, can change an entire mature industry in less than two years. Thus it is crucial that as Google employees and managers we make conscious,careful, and informed choices about how we allocate our time and energy — as individuals and as members of teams. OKRs are the manifestation of those careful choices, and the means by which we coordinate the actions of individuals to achieve great collective goals.

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OKR Best Practices: Writing effective OKRs:

Poorly done/managed OKRs are a waste of time, an empty management gesture. Well done OKRs are a motivational management tool that helps make it clear to teams what’s important, what to optimize, and what tradeoffs to make during their day-to-day work.

Writing good OKRs isn’t easy, but it’s not impossible, either. Pay attention to the following simple rules:

Objectives are the “Whats.” They:

Key Results are the “Hows.” They:

Aligning teams to achieve ambitious goals

In the realm of goal-setting and organizational alignment, OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) stand as a versatile and powerful tool, adept at addressing a range of objectives from aspirational to committed goals. At the heart of successful projects, especially in multifaceted environments like Google, lies the art of balancing ambitious aspirations with concrete commitments, while ensuring seamless coordination across various teams. This introduction delves into the nuances of different OKR types – from aspirational OKRs that aim to inspire and drive innovation, to committed OKRs focused on achievable, operational targets, and cross-team OKRs that foster collaboration among different groups. Each type plays a pivotal role in the orchestration of collaborative efforts, ensuring that all parties involved, be it Ads Development, Ads SRE, or Network Deployment, are not only aligned but also explicitly committed to their part in the collective mission.

Cross-team OKRs

Many important projects at Google require contribution from different groups. OKRs are ideally suited to commit to this coordination. Cross-team OKRs should include all the groups who must materially participate in the OKR, and OKRs committing to each group’s contribution should appear explicitly in each such group’s OKRs. For example, if Ads Development and Ads SRE and Network Deployment must deliver to support a new ads service, then all three teams should have OKRs describing their commitment to deliver their part of the project.

Committed vs. aspirational OKRs

OKRs have two variants, and it is important to differentiate between them:

Commitments are OKRs that we agree will be achieved, and we will be willing to adjust schedules and resources to ensure that they are delivered.

By contrast, aspirational OKRs express how we’d like the world to look, even though we have no clear idea how to get there and/or the resources necessary to deliver the OKR.

OKR Best Practices: Classic OKR-writing mistakes and traps

TRAP #1: Failing to differentiate between committed and aspirational OKRs.

TRAP #2: Business-as-usual OKRs.

TRAP #3: Timid aspirational OKRs.

TRAP #4: Sandbagging

TRAP #5: Low Value Objectives (aka the “Who cares?” OKR).

OKRs must promise clear business value — otherwise, there’s no reason to expend resources doing them. Low Value Objectives (LVOs) are those for which, even if the Objective is completed with a 1.0, no one will notice or care.

TRAP #6: Insufficient KRs for committed Os.

Reading, interpreting, and acting on OKRs

For committed OKRs

The corollary is that every new OKR is likely to involve some amount of escalation, since it requires a change to existing priorities and commitments. An OKR that requires no changes to any group’s activities is a business-as-usual OKR, and those are unlikely to be new — although they may not have previously been written down.

For Aspirational OKRs

Corollary: It is good to move an aspirational OKR to a different team’s list if that team has both the expertise and bandwidth to accomplish the OKR more effectively than the current OKR owner.

More Litmus Tests

Some simple tests to see if your OKRs are good:

If I have questions, where should I send them?

We’d love to hear from you!

Let us know if you have more questions, and check out our OKR Examples and case studies.

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